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Handspring Treo Now Available

miradu2000 writes: "Handspring's Treo, the revolutionary new communicator is now shipping. This has been anticipated since October. See the scoop here! This could change the world..." My guess is no, it won't change the world. But it could reduce by one the number of gadgets a lot of people carry around.

6 of 207 comments (clear)

  1. For those who want the scoop... by ekrout · · Score: 5, Interesting

    For those who want the scoop, there's a video available with the co-founder of this neat little gadget (he also was the inventor of the Palm Pilot that many have come to love).

    The formats supported are RealPlayer, Windows Media Player, and QuickTime. It's available in 56k, 100k, and 300k flavors.

    I just watched it and thought it was kind of neat.

    http://www.handspring.com/products/treo/choose_spe ed.jhtml

    --

    If you celebrate Xmas, befriend me (538
  2. VisorPhone experience by gwernol · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've been using a Handspring Visor and VisorPhone attachment for a little over a year now. For those who don't know, the VisorPhone is a plug-in Springboard module that adds a cell phone to your Visor. Its sort of the prototype for the Treo.

    I really like the VisorPhone, although its not without drawbacks. Its a little large; well actually the combined unit is a little large. It defintely looks a little geeky, and I think the Treo will be worse - Captain Kirk anyone? I'm using the Cingular service here in San Francisco and the reception is not great. I sometimes find I am struggling to get a signal when other cell phone users aren't.

    All that being said I like the VisorPhone lots and will probably upgrade to a Treo Real Soon Now. The main advantages are having only one unit to carry around (I'd have a Palm device anyway); having everything always synched up (again I'd be synching my Palm anyway, this way my phone book gets updated as well); good software integration into the standard PalmOS apps; and I can play DopeWars on my phone.

    Just don't drop it. I've had to replace the screen 3 times. One of the biggest features of the Treo for me is that flip up screen cover...

    --
    Sailing over the event horizon
    1. Re:VisorPhone experience by Ioldanach · · Score: 4, Informative

      ...one hopes that they'll look into GPRS sooner rather than later ...

      From the FAQ:

      Q. Will your product be upgradeable to GPRS?

      A. Yes. When the GPRS networks are commercially available and carriers are offering GPRS service plans, Treo communicators will be upgradeable via a software patch from Handspring.

      Q. What version of GPRS is the Treo communicator going to use?

      A. The Treo communicator will support GPRS class 2, which will provide two channels down and one up (otherwise known as "2+1") for throughput up to 28.8Kbps.

  3. I like my Treo by dipfan · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've been using this for a couple of weeks, it's got GPRS (here in the UK). I like it for a couple of reasons: the obvious one is I don't have to drag around a phone and Palm Pilot anymore, and the other is that since it uses the Palm OS loading all my old PP stuff on it was so easy.

    Good points: ironically, the SMS facility is very well organised and makes it much easier to keep tabs on who sent what, and your replies. The keyboard is good too.

    Particularly good point: answering a call in real Star Trek fashion by flipping open the screen shield. Cool.

    Bad points: the sound quality when using the phone through the shield headset rather than the plug-in ear piece, not good. And the battery life is indeed not good, although it does have a good battery life indicator: a light starting at green and slowly fading to bright red.

    Particularly bad point: no cradle, making the recharging/hot synching less convenient.

    Otherwise, it's a good size, and feels robust. And (not that it really matters) it's got a "wow!" factor, but that's just a new gadget syndrome. Um, overall, a bit pricey I'd say: you know that in a year's time there'll be plenty of these at a better price.

  4. No DCS1800 by blacksmith · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hmm. It's a bit strange - most dual band phones support 900/1800, but this one appears to be 900/1900. That cuts out quite a large proportion of European users. It makes no mention of data rates either, so I assume it doesn't support HSCSD. That limits it to 14.4 kbps, which is pretty restrictive for a "Communicator" device.

  5. Yet another palm phone....So what? by bedmison · · Score: 5, Informative
    Palm-based phones have been out now for about 4 years now. I have a Kyocera smartPhone, which I really like, and after looking at the specs of the Treo, I can say I'm not feeling feature-envy of any kind.

    Treo is smaller...so what, the Kyocera is almost too small as it is. They also made the Treo smaller by using a smaller screen then the Kyocera, so enjoy your scrolling.

    No car kits from handspring...they are going to leave that to 3-rd parties, which means don't expect them for a while. Kyocera makes their own.

    Treo: no voice dialing
    Kyocera: voice dialling in the phone ( 99 names )

    Treo claims 2.5hrs talk/ 60 hours standby. This is about half the Kyocera's capacity.

    Treo says you may need to activate dial up access, and also get an ISP?!?! Both included in Kyocera service. And to make it worse, the Treo's modem is 9600 vs 14.4 in the Kyocera.

    The keyboard is not that interesting to me, because I have used a palm long enough to get proficent with the software keyboard and graphitti. Plus my fingers are too fat to use buttons that small with any degree of accuracy...:^)

    About the only think that is mildly amusing about this phone is that it is GSM, which doesn't help me where I live. I think I'll stay with my tried and true smartPhone.